The story of Carl Lovelace begins with the arrival of the Lovelaces
here in America, with William the Transportee; Carl's supposed 6th Great
Grandfather. William begat Thomas, Thomas begat Faustus, Faustus begat
Thomas, Thomas begat Aquila, Aquila begat Young, Young begat Andrew and
Andrew begat Thomas. Thomas Jefferson Lovelace was born in Kentucky and
served the Union cause. By war's end he was a major in the 17th Kentucky
Cavalry. Thomas married Sarah Harrison and then moved to Jefferson City,
Missouri. On the 6th of February 1876, Carl Lovelace was born.

The family then moved to Waco, Texas which is where the family
finally settled. Thomas opened a small grocery which is where Carl learned
one of his earliest lessons: that you must make something of yourself.
The incident was that Carl delivered the groceries to the front door instead
of the back door in which for doing so he was reprimanded.

At Baylor University

Carl went on to attend Baylor, and wrote poems and essays for the
school publication. He participated in one of the school's most controversial
events in which William Cowper Brann, publisher of the Iconoclast (a monthly
publication dedicated to combating hypocrisy, intolerance and other evils),
defended a girl who got pregnant and claimed she was raped by the brother
of the school President's son-in-law. Brann used the event to launch vitriolic
attacks upon the "hypocrites and humbugs" of the administration of Baylor
University. Needless to say, Brann became unpopular in Waco and yet even
though bitter partisanship resulted in acts of violence and bloodshed,
Brann would not cease in his anti-Baylor sentiments. On April 1, 1898,
while preparing to leave on one of his numerous lecture tours, Brann was
mortally wounded in an encounter with T. E. Davis on a Waco street. Both
Brann and Davis died of bullet wounds the following day. Carl began correspondence
in which he solicited and presented information about Brann as he was recalled
by his contemporaries. Two weeks later Spain declared War upon the United
States of America. Carl graduated early to go fight.

The War with Spain

Once war was declared, President McKinley
put out the call for Volunteers. One of the units formed was a new regiment
of volunteer cavalry which which eventually became nicknamed as the “Rough
Riders.” On the 5th of May, Carl 'jined the cavalry' and on the 15th
of May the Troops lettered A to M (with J omitted) were organized. Robert
B. Huston, 34, of Guthrie was elected Captain of D Troop. Eighty of the
104 members of D Troop were from Oklahoma Territory, the remaining two
dozen from ten states and the District of Columbia.

On May 19th, in San Antonio, Texas, Carl Lovelace, a young man of
22 years of age, standing 5 feet 7.5 inches with a fair complexion, gray
eyes and had light hair was mustered into the 1st
U.S. Volunteer Cavalry, in D Troop.

He was first paid by Major Dodge on May 31. After hard drilling at
last things began to get underway in Port Tampa, Florida. On June 8th the
Rough
Riders began their journey to Cuba and thus to the war front. They
began loading ships and by the 14th they were sailing out of Port Tampa
harbor. But the ship they sailed on, the YUCATAN
did not have much room left for the troops so the members of D Troop slept
on the deck on the starboard side, just forward of the stern and between
the cabin and rail. Carl was not used to sailing as he wrote: "I yearn
for the solid earth, with a yearning that can't be stilled. I have spent
the last twenty-four hours at the railing, and am now as hollow as any
mockery on earth."

Having sailed down he took part in the adventures of the Rough Riders,
serving in the Battle of Las Guasimas on the 24th of June, in the July
1st Battle of Kettle and San Juan Hills, on July 2nd was at the San Juan
Heights looking in the direction of Santiago de Cuba. On July 17, after
a period of negotiation, bombardment, and the destruction of the Spanish
Fleet at the naval Battle at Santiago, the Spanish Santiago
garrison surrendered.

During the time of the siege, there were numerous outbreaks of disease,
and Carl is reported as being sick in the line of duty from the 22nd to
24th of July. He was then paid on 31 July by Major Townsend. He then is
reported as being sick again on the 1st and 2nd and then for a final period
lasting from the 12th to 14th of August which resulted from being on board
the MIAMI, the transport
taking him back to the United States. On the 15th of August the MIAMI
docked at Montauk Point [Camp Wikoff], Long
Island, New York where Troop Ddisembarked off of the ship first.

He remained at Camp Wikoff from the
15th of August to the 15th of September when he and the rest of the Rough
Riders were mustered out of military service. He had served 133 days
and it was an experience he would never forget, for from it he was critical
of the war's administration by military and government leaders. In later
years He wrote that the war made him a conservative and that the experience
instilled in him a greater appreciation for the "dignity and privilege
of American citizenship more than ever in my life."

At Vanderbilt

Apparently the war had changed something else in Carl's life that
he would make something of himself so that he could help others. Perhaps
his physical battles against the Spanish and sicknesses persuaded him to
enter Vanderbilt University's medical school after a "brief, fitful, and
unsatisfactory experience as a pedagogue - slave who escorted children
to school." In 1899 he was named that year's All Time Letterman on the
football team. His passion for the sport would never die.

The 1900 Census and Columbian University

Carl took a position as a census enumerator for the government in
the summer of 1900 and left for Washington, DC where he finished medical
school at Colombian University (now George Washington University Medical
School). He focused his medical career on epidemiology.

Brazil

Carl next took the opportunity to work in South America, and sailed
from New York in 1904. He was chief surgeon of Candelaria Hospital in Porto
Velho, Brazil where a new railway was being constructed. "The years of
medical research centered in the skill, knowledge, and patience of Dr.
Carl Lovelace, who was winning the battle with malaria, yellow fever, beriberi,
blackwater fever, and other jungle diseases."

Life in Waco

By 1913 Carl had returned to Waco, Texas and set up a private medical
practice. On 15 April 1914 he married Lucille Hill. Carl and Lucille had
three sons: Richard Carl Lovelace (born: December 10, 1916; died May 22,
1994) who in 1944 was a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy stationed at Clinton,
Oklahoma, William Hill Lovelace (born August 7, 1918;died July 9, 1966)
who in 1944 was a Lieutenant in the U.S. Army stationed at Long Beach,
California, and John Henry Lovelace (born October 6, 1926; died December
25, 1992) who in 1944 was a student at Baylor University.

Carl served as a pall bearer in many funerals from 1918, 1922, 1924
and even one in 1937. One of Carl's favorite pastimes was to read and he
was a voracious reader and especially liked Mark Twain. When Baylor had
plans of selling and relocating to Dallas, Texas, Lovelace campaigned and
pledged funds to keep the school in Waco.

While musing in 1921, Carl wrote: "Immeasurable are the comforts
of nowadays, [yet] those old days seem in retrospect to have seductiveness
and a glamour about them which illuminate and glorify certain of those
who walked in them. Was it truly a heroic age, or is it that one simply
looks back and sees all things glorified by the light of a youth that is
gone?"

Carl served as one of Waco's City’s four Commissioners in 1932 and
1933. It was during this time that the New Deal arose and it appears that
Carl viewed many of the new governmental measures as necessary, but he
worried about the many people who blindly accepted the changes. He was
also not above making fun of what he saw as the absurdities of new federal
programs. He kept a copy of a fictitious letter from a man who heard the
government was paying farmers not to raise hogs and satirically decided
to go into the 'not raising hogs business' himself."

From 1940-1942 (so it appears) he served as chairman of the Waco
Public Library Board. Carl saw the rise of two world wars but failed to
witness America’s triumph over Japan.

On July 19, 1944, his beloved wife, Lucille, died. At 9:05am on Thursday
the 14th of September 1944, forty-six years after he was mustered out of
service at Camp Wickoff, New York, he mustered
out of this life into eternity. Readers of the Waco News Tribune
would have read this obituary on Pages 1 and 16 on Friday: “Dr. Lovelace
Is Claimed by Death After Long Illness – Prominent Waco Physician, Veteran
of Two Wars, To Be Buried Saturday. Funeral Services for Dr. Carl Lovelace
will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, with burial at Oakwood Cemetery. Dr.
Lovelace, 68, a veteran of two wars, medical director of the Amicable Life
Insurance Co., chairman of board of the Waco Public library, pioneer Waco
physician, former city commissioner, former commander of the James A. Edmond
post of the American Legion, died at 9:05 a.m. Thursday at his home, 1525
Washington Avenue, after an illness of many months. His death followed
by approximately two months of his wife, Mrs. Lucille Hill Lovelace, who
died on July 19. Surviving Dr. Lovelace are three sons, Lieut. Richard
Carl Lovelace, U.S. navy, now stationed at Clinton, Okla., Lieut. William
Hill Lovelace, in the army at Long Beach, Calif., and Henry Lovelace, student
at Baylor University. Dr. Lovelace, born in Missouri (his father was Major
Thomas Jefferson Lovelace, native of Kentucky, who was with the Union army
in the War Between the States) came to Texas as a child, and resided with
his family in Burleson county and later in Milam county. He came to Waco
55 years ago. Dr. Lovelace graduated from Baylor University in 1898, receiving
his diploma before he left as a volunteer for service in Cuba during the
Spanish-American War. After that war he graduated from the Vanderbilt school
of medicine, interned at Washington D.C., then spent some years in South
America with a railroad and later with the government. On his return to
Waco he practiced medicine in partnership with Dr. H.F. Connally, Dr. J.
W. Hale, and Dr. R. B. Nutter, until he accepted the post of the Amicable
Life Insurance company, since which date he had not engaged in private
practice. Dr. Lovelace was a major during World War I and was a member
of the First Baptist Church.” In turning to page 16 they would have come
across more information pertaining to the Funeral of Dr. Lovelace on page
11 under the funeral notices: “LOVELACE, DR. CARL – Dr. Carl Lovelace,
68, died at his home 1525 Washington Avenue at 9:05 a.m. Thursday. Funeral
services will be held at Wilkirson-Hatch Chapel at 10 a.m. Saturday, with
Rev. Robert R. Brown officiating. Burial will be in Oakwood cemetery. Surviving
Dr. Lovelace are three sons, Lt. Richard Carl Lovelace, U.S. navy, now
stationed at Clinton, Okla.; Lt. William Hill Lovelace, in the army at
Long Beach, Calif., and Henry Lovelace of Waco. Dr. Lovelace was born in
Missouri and came to Waco 55 years ago. He served in the army in the Spanish-American
and First World Wars. Pallbearers will be Dr. H. F. Connally, A. R. Wilson,
Holt Massey, W. L. Edmond, John Sheehy and W. F. Crawford. Wilkirson-Hatch
Funeral Home: 1124 Washington Avenue, phone 63.” In a search of the Death
Records of McLennan County, Texas, Vo. 2: 1935-1951 one notices: “Lovelace,
Dr. Carl’ Sept. 14, 1944; Vol. 25; Cert. 643 in reference to his Death
Certificate” and finally in the Oakwood Cemetery Plot Information on page
190 in “Block 18” in Lot 15 we find the final resting place of Carl Lovelace.

Legacy

To this day, who knows about Carl Lovelace? The first time I read
of him was in 10th grade at Chase High School where I read his name in
the roster of the Rough Riders in Virgil Carrington Jones' book Roosevelt's
Rough Riders I wondered if he and I were related and that was that
until late this year I began digging in the Lovelace genealogy and found
his name again, thus I began my successful quest to link up with my cousin.

May the memory of Carl Lovelace march on not only as a Rough Rider
but as a man who made something of himself in order to help his fellow
man.

Family genealogical research by Creighton Lovelace based primarily
on articles that appeared on the Lovelace List: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~lovelace/index.htm

Jack D. Lovelace on 21 Dec. 2004 in a response email to Creighton
Lovelace sent via the Lovelace Genealogical List supposes Carl Lovelace
to be traced in relation from William the Transportee albeit unconfirmed.
This email hereafter cited as: JD to CL.

Military service record of Carl Lovelace, documenting service in
the 1st U. S. Volunteer Cavalry (Rough Riders) during the Spanish American
War., 05/01/1898 - 09/30/1898; War Department. The Adjutant General's Office.
(03/04/1907 - 09/18/1947) pg. 1

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